Colors

I totally agree. I don't like the speckled finish. I wish it was just smooth white. Although it's not that hard or expensive to paint the interior if one was so inclined. Pretty easy to access most of the paintable areas. There's been some Brats who have done it too.
 
cattlejack":q0yudbwp said:
Why is it that I never see the insides of c dory's painted. I would think that would brighten up the interiors somewhat. Just asking

You mean painted by owners? Or painted from the factory? Interiors are actually sprayed-in gel coat, more durable than most paints (although the gel coat can wear out over time too, especially on the floor, I re-gelcoated the floor of my 1990 a couple of years ago to freshen it up during a core repair project).

The texturizer (or "speckles") are added to hide the imperfections since it is otherwise just bare fiberglass cloth and tape on the insides, not a molded interior like some boats have. The raw interior is part of what makes a C-dory what it is, a simple, utilitarian, light weight cruiser. I think some models do have headliners though, like maybe the Venture and TomCat?

In terms of brightening it up, I'm not sure what color you would paint the white / off-white to make it brighter? I'm quite happy with the interior brightness in my two C-dories, so the thought of painting them a different color would have never crossed my mind.

-Mike
 
I painted mine with a very slight green tint to go with with the stripe color (don't ask me, the wife picked it). The paint is from HD. In order to insulate the inside I painted 3 coats of the SC1000 sound deadening stuff that was recommended by someone on this site. I did this right off the bat when I got my 22 so I don't know what difference it made (I suspect not much). Since the SC1000 is white and kind of open cell and soft, I covered it with 3 coats of exterior grade latex paint from HD.

The paint is eggshell finish and it brightens up the interior a lot. While the speckle finish may hide the imperfections in the interior fit and finish, it does make the interior look kind of dingy and dirty. We think that the interior looks a lot better with the lighter, solid color finish.

FWIW. it took a full day to remove stuff and mask the interior. 6 days to paint (1 coat/day) and then 1 day to remove the masking and restore the interior. So you're talking 8-10 days to repaint like I did.

IMO, it was worth it to do this.
 
We are planning to do just that this next year?? Our 27 is very dark with a lot of the dark wood inside. I plan to paint it all a light blue and off white.
 
I personally like the stock interior. It is easy to clean, and you can wipe it sown with a vinegar solution and nothing grows on it and the speckles are not adversely affected by the cleaning.

the utilitarian concept is dual purpose: (1. simple to apply so cost effective, and (2. more durable than paint so wear spots don't show up.

Harvey
SleepyC :moon

IMG_4111.thumb.jpg
 
hardee":2zwhsbcz said:
I personally like the stock interior. It is easy to clean, and you can wipe it sown with a vinegar solution and nothing grows on it and the speckles are not adversely affected by the cleaning.

the utilitarian concept is dual purpose: (1. simple to apply so cost effective, and (2. more durable than paint so wear spots don't show up.

Harvey
SleepyC :moon

IMG_4111.thumb.jpg

yeah that looks really ncie and clean.
 
Except for sleeping, 97% of my time is spent enjoying the waterscapes around me. I look at my boats interior as a means to cruise/navigate/store rather than something to sit inside and enjoy the interior view. Call me old fashion, but I like the KISS principle when it comes to boat interiors...… except for navigation equipment .... where more is better, and KISS is BAD ;-)!
 
BTDT":2h4c21ji said:
Except for sleeping, 97% of my time is spent enjoying the waterscapes around me. I look at my boats interior as a means to cruise/navigate/store rather than something to sit inside and enjoy the interior view. Call me old fashion, but I like the KISS principle when it comes to boat interiors...… except for navigation equipment .... where more is better, and KISS is BAD ;-)!

I agree, most of my time is using the boat to go, get to someplace, to see and photograph. Admittedly, my boat has some time on it since that pix was taken, and I have added considerable, but I still like the simple, tough interior.

Harvey
SleepyC :moon
 
I painted my interior after adding a couple coats of sound/heat insulation. I used an off white similar to the lighter color of the original speckle coat. Since the interior of the 16 is small, I just used a standard Krylon spray can color and about 5 cans. I used a paint that was more of an enamel than the original dirt collecting surface. The best thing about that is that the couple of times when I've had something smudge/gouge the surface, I just grab a spray can and fix it.

Mark
 
Looking at ssobol's before and after pics, I like his paint job better than the speckles. I would not be willing to go through all of that for the result, but I do like the result.
 
My artist wife said the speckled paint job looked like "splattered fish guts". Maybe the Toland's intent - who knows... After extensive prep, we primed and sprayed on a nice version of yellow in an enamel from Sherwin-Williams mixed with ceramic microspheres. It really warmed up the place. We're gonna do something similar when I get the boat right-side-up again...

EZAccessCockpit.jpg
 
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